Spine
1994 Jun 15;19(12):1329-34
Characteristics in Medicare beneficiaries associated with reoperation
after lumbar spine surgery.
Ciol MA, Deyo RA, Kreuter W, Bigos SJ.
Department of Health Services, University of Washington, Seattle.
STUDY DESIGN: A cohort study was undertaken using medical
claims of Medicare beneficiaries.
OBJECTIVES: Factors associated with reoperation after
lumbar spine surgery were identified.
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Repeat spine surgery is one
outcome measure of surgical success, but little is known about clinical
or demographic factors associated with repeat surgery.
METHODS: Medicare beneficiaries who had surgery in 1985
were included in follow-up through 1989. Time between the first operation
and a lumbar spine reoperation, death, or end of follow-up period was
recorded. Survival analysis (time-to-event) techniques were used to test
the association of baseline characteristics with reoperation.
RESULTS: Higher reoperation rates were associated (P
< 0.05) with previous back surgery, younger age, recent hospitalization,
white race, and diagnosis of herniated disc (compared with other diagnoses).
Fusion alone or combined with other procedures did not lower the reoperation
rate.
CONCLUSION: Reoperation rates are affected not only by
technical factors, but also by demographic and clinical characteristics
that are often omitted from reports of surgical case series.
PMID: 8066512 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLIN